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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East
This book investigates the founding and building of cities in the ancient Near East. The creation of new cities was imagined as an ideological project or a divine intervention in the political narratives and mythologies of Near Eastern cultures, often masking the complex processes behind the social production of urban space. During the Early Iron Age (ca. 1200–850 bce), Assyrian and Syro-Hittite rulers developed a highly performative official discourse that revolved around constructing cities, cultivating landscapes, building watercourses, erecting monuments, and initiating public festivals. This volume combs through archaeological, epigraphic, visual, architectural, and environmental evidence to tell the story of a region from the perspective of its spatial practices, landscape history, and architectural technologies. It argues that the cultural processes of the making of urban spaces shape collective memory and identity as well as sites of political performance and state spectacle. ¨ ur Om ¨ Harmans¸ah is Assistant Professor of Archaeology, Egyptology, and Ancient Western Asian Studies at Brown University. He currently directs the Yalburt Yaylası Archaeological Landscape Project, a Brown University–based regional survey in west-central Turkey since 2010. In the past, he has worked on archaeological projects in Turkey and Greece, including Gordion, Ayanis, Kerkenes Da˘g, and Isthmia. His articles have been published in journals such as Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, Archaeological Dialogues, and the Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research.
Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East
¨ ur Om ¨ Harmans¸ah Brown University
cambridge university press Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, S˜ao Paulo, Delhi, Mexico City Cambridge University Press 32 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10013-2473, USA www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9781107027947 ¨ ur C Om ¨ Harmans¸ah 2013 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 2013 Printed in the United States of America A catalog record for this publication is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data ¨ ur, Harmansah, Om ¨ author. ¨ ur Cities and the shaping of memory in the ancient Near East / Om ¨ Harmansah, Brown University. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-107-02794-7 1. Cities and towns – Middle East – History. 2. Collective memory – Middle East. I. Title. HT147.M628H37 2013 307.760956–dc23 2012037828 ISBN 978-1-107-02794-7 Hardback Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party Internet Web sites referred to in this publication and does not guarantee that any content on such Web sites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.
For my daughter Nar
CONTENTS
List of Figures
page xi
List of Tables
xiii
Abbreviations
xv
Preface
1
2
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Introduction
1
Cities, Imagination, and Memory in the Ancient Near East
1
Building the City
3
Cities, Landscape, and the Long Term
6
The Structure of the Book
10
Landscapes of Change: Cities, Politics, and Memory
15
Introduction: Cities and Moving Landscapes
15
“The Rock Was Untouched”: The Ideology and Rhetorics of Landscapes
25
Contemporary Approaches to Archaeological Landscapes
28
Upper Mesopotamian Environment during the Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age Transition
31
The Evidence from Regional Surveys
35
Urbanization and Commemoration in Syro-Hittite Landscapes
40
Moving Landscapes: Shifts in the Geography of Power
45
Rock Reliefs, New Cities and Colonized Landscapes
47
Making Places in Malizi/Melid
50
Settling Agro-Pastoralists, Moving Capitals
67
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Contents 3
4
5
6
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The Land of Aˇs sˇ ur: The Making of Assyrian Landscapes
72
Introduction: Assyrian Landscapes on the Move
72
Cities, Landscapes, and Political Actors in a Changing World
74
Building the Frontiers: Middle Assyrian Foundations in the Jazira and the Upper Tigris Basin
76
Beyond Aˇssˇur: The Making of Assyria in a New Landscape
81
Founding Kalhu
89
Assyrian Rock Reliefs, Landscape Commemoration, and the Inscription of Place
93
Conclusions: Moving Landscapes and Place-Making Practices
100
City and the Festival: Monuments, Urban Space, and Spatial Narratives
102
Introduction: Ceremony, Performance, and Building in the City
102
The Production of Urban Space
104
The Upper Mesopotamian City: Aspects of Planning and Urban Formation
108
The Foundation of Kalhu: Narrativity and Performance
114
Spatial Narratives: The Urban Landscape of Kalhu
119
Obelisk and the Stele: The Ritualization of Public Space
130
“These Gates I Orthostated”: Monuments, Memory and the Making of Ceremonial Space at Karkamiˇs
134
Upright Stones and Building Stories: Architectural Technologies and the Poetics of Urban Space
153
Technological Style, Architectonic Culture, and the Spaces of Craft-Knowledge
153
Orthostats: A Monumental Finish for Weathering Walls
157
Kalhu: Technologies of Stone, Architectural Innovation, and Visual Culture
162
Upright Stones: The Long-Term History of an Architectural Technique
168
Appropriation of Representationality: The Transition to the Early Iron Age in North Syria
180
Tukult¯ı-Apil-Eˇsarra (Tiglath-Pileser) I: Middle Assyrian Orthostats and the Idea of Commemoration
183
Concluding Remarks
185
Cities, Place, and Desire
189
Cities and Desire
189
Contents Desirous Places
190
Imagined Cities
192
From Architectural Space to Archaeologies of Landscape and Place
193
Notes
197
Bibliography
225
Index
343
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LIST OF FIGURES
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10
11 12 13 14
Map of Upper Mesopotamia during the Iron Age, with cities, settlements, and sites mentioned in the text, 3 Map of main archaeological survey projects in Upper Mesopotamia, 17 Syro-Hittite states and main Iron Age settlements, 38 Tell ‘Ain Dara. Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age temple plan, 42 Tell ‘Ain Dara. Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age temple, general view, 43 Temple of the Halabean Storm God, Aleppo Citadel. Plan, 44 Temple of the Halabean Storm God, Aleppo Citadel. Orthostats, 45 Kızılda˘g: Rock relief and inscriptions of Hartapu, overlooking the dried Hotamıs¸ Lake, 49 Map of the Early Iron Age sites and monuments of Malizi/Melid, 51 Elbistan Karah¨oyuk ¨ mound, pot-Hittite level Phase 2 plan: archaeological context of the Hieroglyphic Luwian stele, 52 Elbistan Karah¨oyuk ¨ Hieroglyphic Luwian stele, 53 Arslantepe (Malatya) topographic site plan, 55 Arslantepe (Malatya) plan of the Iron Age “Gate of the Lions”, 57 ˙Ispekc¸ur ¨ stele with Hieroglyphic Luwian inscription, 59
15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28
29
Darende stele with Hieroglyphic Luwian inscription, 60 Izgın stele with Hieroglyphic Luwian inscription, 63 Tell Halaf. Topographic site plan with excavated remains, 65 Tell Halaf. Topographic plan of the citadel with excavated remains, 66 “Land of Aˇssˇur” Upper Middle Tigris region in the Iron Age, 74 Upper Tigris River Basin during the Iron Age, 81 Site plan of Aˇssˇur, 83 The environs of Aˇssˇur and K¯ar-Tukult¯ı-Ninurta, 85 K¯ar-Tukult¯ı-Ninurta, surface survey map of the settlement as of 1989, 86 K¯ar-Tukult¯ı-Ninurta, plan of the monumental sector of the city, 87 Immediate environs of Kalhu, showing the Patti-hegalli irrigation canal and the Negub ¯ Tunnel, 92 Bronze door reliefs of Shalmaneser III, Tell Balawat (Imgur-Enlil), 96 Bronze door reliefs of Shalmaneser III, Tell Balawat (Imgur-Enlil), Relief Panel 10, 97 Bronze door reliefs of Shalmaneser III, Tell Balawat (Imgur-Enlil), Relief Panel 10 detail, 97 Plan of the Tigris Tunnel area and environs at Birkleyn C¸ay, 98
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List of Figures 30
31
32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46
47
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Relief image of Tiglath-pileser I on the Lower Cave (Cave I) walls, with Tigris 1 cuneiform inscription to his left, 99 Tigris Tunnel-Birkleyn C¸ay, Upper Cave mouth with Shalmaneser III’s relief and inscriptions, 99 Zincirli. Iron Age settlement plan, 112 G¨olluda˘ ¨ g. Iron Age settlement plan, 113 Kalhu (Nimrud) ¯ Northwest Palace of Aˇssˇur-nasir-pal II plan, 116 “Banquet Stele” from Aˇssˇur-nasir-pal II’s Northwest Palace, Kalhu (Nimrud), ¯ 117 Kalhu (Nimrud) ¯ city plan, 120 Kalhu (Nimrud) ¯ citadel plan with excavated remains, 121 Kalhu (Nimrud) ¯ “Forth Shalmaneser” (ekal maˇsarti of Shalmaneser III) plan, 122 Kalhu (Nimrud) ¯ Quay wall section, 123 Kalhu (Nimrud) ¯ plan of Ninurta temple in Kalhu citadel, 125 Kalhu (Nimrud) ¯ Ninurta temple in Kalhu citadel, 127 Kalhu (Nimrud) ¯ Ninurta temple orthostat: Ninurta chases Anzu bird. Drawing, 129 Karkamiˇs, city plan, 140 Karkamiˇs, “Lower Palace Area” plan, 141 Karkamiˇs, “Water Gate” plan, 143 Karkamiˇs, Lower Palace Area detail plan. Long Wall of Sculpture, Great Staircase, and the Temple of the Storm God, 144 Karkamiˇs, “Long Wall of Sculpture” schematic drawing of the relief narrative, 145
48
49 50
51
52 53
54
55
56 57 58
59
60
Karkamiˇs. Lower Palace Area and the Great Staircase. General view of excavations, 145 Karkamiˇs, “King’s Gate Area” plan, 147 Karkamiˇs, Kubaba-Karhuhas Procession. Orthostat reliefs, Ankara Anatolian Civilizations Museum, 149 Tilmen H¨oyuk. ¨ Sample system section from the Middle Bronze Age orthostats of the northwest fac¸ade of the palace, 159 North Syria in the Middle and Late Bronze Ages, 169 Ebla (Tell Mardikh) in the Middle Bronze Age. Topographic map and excavated remains, 171 Ebla (Tell Mardikh), Southwest (“Damascus”) Gate of the Lower City in Area A, 172 Ebla (Tell Mardikh), Southwest (“Damascus”) Gate of the Lower City in Area A. View from the northwest, 173 Tilmen H¨oyuk ¨ topographical plan, 176 Tilmen H¨oyuk ¨ citadel plan during the Middle Bronze Age (Level II), 177 Tilmen H¨oyuk, ¨ general view of Middle Bronze Age Palace remains from the northwest, 177 Tilmen H¨oyuk ¨ Middle Bronze Age orthostats from the northwest fac¸ade of the palace, viewed from the entrance plaza, 179 Rock relief of Warpalawaˇs, king of Tabal at ˙Ivriz, 193
LIST OF TABLES
1
2
Archaeological regional survey projects in Upper Mesopotamia: The Late Bronze Age–Iron Age transition, 18 Genealogy of Malizean kings, 58
3
4
The kingdom of Malizi/Melid and the most prominent Hieroglyphic Luwian monuments by its kings, 61 Rulers of the Early Iron Age at Karkamiˇs and their commemorative monuments, 138
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ABBREVIATIONS
AA AAAS AfO AJA AnaAras¸ AnSt AW BaM BASOR BCSMS BiblArch BSMS CAD CAH CAJ DaM EpigAnat IstMitt JAE JANES JAOS JCS JESHO JFA JMA JNES JSAH MDOG OEANE PAPS
Arch¨aologischer Anzeiger Les annales ach´eologiques arabes syriennes Archiv fur ¨ Orientforschung American Journal of Archaeology Anadolu Aras¸tırmaları Anatolian Studies Antike Welt Baghdader Mitteilungen Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research Bulletin of the Canadian Society for Mesopotamian Studies Biblical Archaeologist Bulletin of the Society for Mesopotamian Studies Chicago Assyrian Dictionary Cambridge Ancient History Cambridge Archaeological Journal Damaszener Mitteilungen Epigraphica Anatolica Istanbuler Mitteilungen Journal of Architectural Education Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society Journal of the American Oriental Society Journal of Cuneiform Studies Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient Journal of Field Archaeology Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology Journal of Near Eastern Studies Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997) Proceedings of the American Philosophical Association
xv
Abbreviations RA RHA RlA RIMA SAA SAAB SMEA TAD TAVO Tuba-Ar ¨ WA WO ZA
xvi
Revue d’Assyriologie et d’Arch´eologie Orientale Revue Hittite et Asianique Reallexikon der Assyriologie The Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia, Assyrian Periods State Archives of Assyria State Archives of Assyria Bulletin Studi Micenei ed Egeo-Anatolici Turk ¨ Arkeoloji Dergisi Tubinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients ¨ Tuba-Ar: Turkiye Bilimler Akademisi Arkeoloji Dergisi ¨ ¨ World Archaeology Die Welt des Orients Zeitschrift fur ¨ Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Arch¨aologie
PREFACE
Ankara, the city where I grew up, was refounded as the modern capital of the newly born Turkish Republic on October 13, 1923. Founders of the state in Turkey were keen on distancing themselves from Istanbul, the aged capital of the Byzantine and Ottoman Empires. They intended to open up a new urban sphere, an ideologically and socially fresh ground for enacting their modernist utopias for the generation of an urban culture fully endowed with European modernity. The architecture of this newly constructed capital was characterized as “architecture of revolution,” and adopted the technologies, styles, and visual culture of the Modern Movement in Europe (Bozdo˘gan 2001: 56f.; Kezer 1998). Constructing Ankara was perhaps the most concrete manifestation of the new political order and the ideology of the new republic that explicitly distanced itself from the contaminated recent past. Ankara’s ceremonial spaces were designed for and as spectacles of this modernist state. I also grew up within a nationalist education system in which we were taught that Ankara rose from a tiny and dusty Anatolian town to a modern capital. It would be much later in graduate school that I would learn with astonishment that in the sixteenth century Ankara was probably the largest city in Central Anatolia and the center of a prosperous network of trade. Such significance of Ankara as a central place was also the case most probably during the Phrygian and Early Roman periods. Looking from the long-term perspective then, the choice of Ankara as the new capital of modern Turkey was clearly not a random choice but a historically informed decision. It was partly dictated by the potential of the place and its history of being central in networks of trade and political organization of the Central Anatolian landscape. When I started to formulate my first ideas about this research project in the beginning of the twenty-first century, Ankara had long diverged from the ideals of its modernist founders. This immense city of 4.5 million or so people had been devoured by squatter neighborhoods in its periphery and fallen victim to unplanned urban development with the massive influx of population from
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Preface the countryside. Hermann Jansen’s adorable 1927 plan for Ankara, which conceived it as a garden city and placed the airport centrally in its hippodrome, left very little of its traces in the city. Ankara instead created a cultural landscape of its own, keeping the subtle imprint of its fragile everyday history. In very interesting ways, this city embodies a complex mixture of idealist interventions to the urban space and the subtle resistance of everyday practices and collective memory, and the gradual, day-by-day deconstruction of ambitious and rigid schemes. In Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East, I explore this very tension, this duality of urban space between the short-term, picturesque, utopian monumentality occasionally imposed upon the city versus its long-term cultural biography. My passion for the study of cities emanates from the experience of Ankara’s restless spaces. I would like to express my gratitude here to those of you who substantially contributed to the making of this book. Those of you whose names I fail to mention, I hope you will forgive me. This book has its roots in my PhD dissertation written at the University of Pennsylvania’s Department of the History of Art. My advisor there, Holly Pittman, was an endless source of heartfelt support and encouragement from the very beginning of my graduate studies at Penn to this day. It would also be hard to exaggerate Renata Holod’s impact on the formation of my approach to architectural history and the study of landscapes. Professor Irene J. Winter of Harvard University gave me encouragement during our several encounters from symposia to symposia. Apart from the influence of her scholarship on my work, she tirelessly read my work during the process of writing and wrote to me many memorable notes, messages, and letters, all full of insights and constructive criticism. The late Professor Keith DeVries was always an endless and friendly source of inspiration and awareness of the most up-to-date research in Anatolian archaeology. I am grateful to Richard Zettler, who introduced me to Mesopotamian archaeology, and to my Akkadian mentors Barry Eichler and Earle Lichty. I would like to express my gratitude to my colleagues at Brown University, Sue Alcock and John F. Cherry, who provided generous support as I struggled to finish this manuscript for Cambridge University Press. Teaching at Reed College and Brown University, my students were exposed to several portions of the book, and their feedback has been instrumental to me while giving the book its final touches. I am also grateful to the two anonymous readers of the manuscript. The book benefited immensely from their careful reading and constructive criticism. Working with Cambridge University Press editor Beatrice Rehl and her assistants Isabella Vitti, Amanda J. Smith, and Anastasia Graf was always delightful. I thank them for their hard work. Lengthy hours of discussion at the University of Pennsylvania Museum Caf´e with Elif Denel helped me shape several ideas related to Syro-Hittite states and to overcome the difficulties of dealing with archaeological material from
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Preface the Iron Age in north Syria and southeast Anatolia. What my friends and colleagues Matthew Rutz, Paul Delnero, WuXin, Gul ¨ Kac¸maz, Ac¸alya Kıyak, Heather Grossman, Gabriel Pizzorno, Aslı Tanrıkulu, Gunder Varinlio˘glu, Susan ¨ Helft, Jeremie Peterson, Alexis Boutin, and Ersan Ocak have shared with me has always been beyond collegiality, and there is always something from each of them between the lines of this book. My family in Turkey – Guler, Fahri, Onur, ¨ and Rabia – were a continuous source of encouragement and support over the many years I spent in the United States. Thank you. Peri Johnson made the greatest of all contributions to this book as she stood by me unfailingly with love and collegiality. Very few of the ideas presented here have not gone through the examination by her very critical eye. Words will fail me if I even attempt to begin thanking her. During the fieldwork phase of this project, numerous individuals helped me to access various archaeological resources. I would like to thank G. Kenneth Sams and Altan C¸ilingiro˘glu for allowing me to work on the Iron Age architectural techniques at the sites of Gordion and Ayanis, respectively, even though I ended up not using this valuable material in this book. I am grateful to the General Directorate of Monuments and Museums, Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Turkey, who generously issued permits for working on the Iron Age stone monuments at Van Archaeological Museum (2001), Gaziantep Archaeological Museum (2001), and Ankara Anatolian Civilizations Museum (2002). I am also indebted to the friendly staff members of the three museums for their help and support during the times I spent in each of them. I am grateful to Refik Duru, Kay Kohlmeyer, Reinhard Dittman, David Hawkins, Tony Waltham, Frances Pinnock, and the Ebla Project, for kindly allowing me to use illustrations from their publications. Similarly generous was the British Academy, the British Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the British Institute for the Study of Iraq with the images they have supplied. The John Hay Library at Brown University kindly digitized a number of the illustrations used in the book. The revisions of the volume were carried out during my sabbatical year at the Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations (RCAC) at Koc¸ University (Istanbul). I thank Scott Redford and the staff at RCAC for providing a very hospitable environment in which to work. I am also grateful to the staff at the Cogut Center for the Humanities at Brown University, where I held a faculty fellowship in the fall of 2012. I thank Bradley Sekedat for helping with the index. Finally, some of the ideas presented in this book have been previously published elsewhere. An abbreviated section of Chapter 3 on the Iron Age kingdom of Melid has been published in Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology [vol 24.1 (2011) 55–83], while a shorter version of Chapter 4 appeared in Bulletin of the Schools of Oriental Research [vol. 365 (2012) 53–77]. A shorter version of Chapter 5 appeared in the volume Ancient Near Eastern Art in Context: Studies in Honor of Irene J. Winter by Her Students, edited by Jack Cheng and Marian H. Feldman.
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[Ninurta speaking] Let my beloved city, the sanctuary Nibru, raise its head as high as heaven! Let my city be pre-eminent among the cities of my brothers! Let my temple rise (?) the highest . . . among the temples of my brothers! Let the territory of my city be the freshwater well of Sumer! Let the Anuna, my brother gods, bow down there! Let their flying birds establish nests in my city! Let their refugees refresh themselves in my shade. “Ninurta’s Return to Nibru,” lines 168–74 Black et al. 2006: 181–86
one
INTRODUCTION
Towns and cities with their monuments, vast constructions, and large buildings are set up for the masses and not for the few. . . . If there are no cities, the dynasty will have to build a new city, firstly, in order to complete the civilization of its realm. Ibn Khaldun ˆ (1332–1406 AD) Muqaddimah (IV.1–2) Many scholars writing about the politics of urban design discuss how planned capitals such as Ankara, Brasilia, and Islamabad are conceived, before everything else, as expressions of the pride and hard work of nation building and thus cannot possibly derive their image and character from an existing city. The less there is on site, the greater the pride and glory in making the capital “out of nothing” as a popular school song about Ankara goes in Turkey. Sibel Bozdo˘gan, Modernism and Nation Building (2001: 68)
Cities, Imagination, and Memory in the Ancient Near East This book investigates the practice of building cities in the ancient Near East as an architectural practice, a form of public celebration, and a source of political discourse. The idea of building a city is frequently found in the Near Eastern historical record as a political intervention of the ruling elite into structures of settlement and built landscapes. Sargon II, the Assyrian king of the late eighth century bce, is famed for his foundation and construction of Dur¯ Sˇ arruk¯en (“Fortress of Sargon”) at the site of modern Khorsabad, perhaps in emulation of his Akkadian namesake who founded AgadeKI in the late third millennium bce. Equally famous is his impressive organization of the participation of several Assyrian provinces in the construction project, each with its own workmen and craftspeople (Parpola 1995). Likewise, Babylonian rulers Nabopolassar
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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East and Nebuchadnezzar II refounded and constructed Babylon’s impressive urban landscape in the late seventh and early sixth centuries bce, respectively, incorporating many innovations in architectural technologies (Van de Mieroop 2003). Similarly ambitious but perhaps less well known is the energetic Urartian king Rusa II’s foundation of several new imperial fortresses across the empire in the first half of the seventh century bce using a distinctive style of stonemasonry that linked them together and functioned as some sort of royal insignia (Harmans¸ah 2009). The Cilician Syro-Hittite king Azatiwatas of Adanawa founded a fortress at today’s Karatepe-Arslantas¸; like Sargon II and Rusa II, he named it after his own royal name, Azatiwataya, as known from the hieroglyphic Luwian inscriptions of the site (Hawkins 2000, I: I.1). Last but not least, the series of ceremonial capitals built by the Achaemenid kings at Pasargadae and Persepolis are perhaps among the most spectacular of such projects. These randomly selected examples give us a taste of the geographical spread and cultural diversity of city-building practices in the Near Eastern Iron Ages from Babylonia to Anatolia and Iran. They not only help understand how new cities, imperial capitals, and regional centers were built, but also show how building cities was envisioned as a social event that then became part and parcel of the politics of kingship and the shaping of social memory at the time. Thinking more broadly, how did such a building practice and urban policy transform Near Eastern urban landscapes during the Iron Ages? What was the nature of these building programs, and how did they come to be associated with the political discourse and collective identity in such a direct way? Was the decision to build a city always a prerogative of the ruling elites as social utopias, or were these elites in fact conforming to ongoing settlement trends, tangible economic conjunctures, and other social processes that are less accessible, less visible to us in the historical record? As large-scale architectural projects, how were they organized in terms of labor force, material resources, and building craftsmanship? And how did these projects relate to the circulation of architectural knowledge and innovative building technologies? In attempting to answer these questions in a regionally specific and historically nuanced way, this monograph is about the making of cities in a particular geographical region, the upper Syro-Mesopotamia during the Early Iron Age (c. 1200–850 bce). The Early Iron Age can be envisioned as a prelude to the spectacular stories of urban development sampled earlier from the Middle and Late Iron Ages (850–330 bce). The Early Iron Age is the period when one sees several strands of settlement foundations materialize contemporaneously in the context of a newly emergent urbanism and geopolitical configuration following the collapse of the great powers of the Late Bronze Age around 1200 bce. Upper Syro-Mesopotamia, which is now constituted by modern-day northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, and northern Syria, was a region of thriving ancient cities during the Iron Age (Figure 1). In the east lay the core territories of the Assyrian
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Introduction
1
Map of Upper Mesopotamia during the Iron Age, with cities, settlements, and sites mentioned in the text. (Base map by Peri Johnson, using ESRI Topographic Data [Creative Commons]: World Shaded Relief, World Linear Water)
Empire, and in the west and northwest a constellation of Syro-Hittite regional polities. Assyria was a major territorial state at this time, with a gradually urbanizing core in the Middle Tigris region and eventual expansion to lands in the west and south until its collapse in the late seventh century bce. North Syria and southeast and south-central Turkey were home to many regional principalities that were based on one or two main urban centers and their hinterland. These polities are collectively known in the scholarly literature as Syro-Hittite states for their self-proclaimed cultural heritage of the Hittite Empire, which disintegrated around 1175 bce (Hawkins 1982). Among the Assyrian Empire and the Syro-Hittite polities of the Early Iron Age, founding cities was a shared building practice, a source of official discourse and cultural identity, as has been abundantly demonstrated by both the archaeological evidence and the textual record (Mazzoni 1994). Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East is the first comprehensive account of this multivalent historical phenomenon from a comparative perspective. It presents a cultural history of the practice of founding cities by reviewing both ancient texts and archaeological excavations and surveys, along with environmental research and spatial analysis.
Building the City The foundation of Assyrian and Syro-Hittite cities involved major construction projects and the making of commemorative monuments in the urban center while the surrounding countryside was cultivated with plantations and irrigation programs. These important social events were celebrated in the written and pictorial narratives of the state and became an important component of the official ideology, a practice shared by Upper Syro-Mesopotamian states.
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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East Palaces, temples, gates, and the public spaces of the Assyrian and Syro-Hittite cities were famously surrounded by carved stone orthostats (finely cut upright stones lining walls) and a variety of monuments featuring pictorial narratives and commemorative inscriptions. This book brings these architectural technologies, monument-making practices, and urban visual culture of the Iron Age cities into a common focus and argues that the symbolically charged, regionally shared language of urban spaces was part and parcel of the processes by which collectively shared memories and cultural identities were made. City foundations have long been discussed as short-term historical events and were associated with the agency of political elites or imperial power. Particularly the foundation of imperial cities and the movement of the political capitals to new locations are frequently discussed within the context of political history as if they were utopias of narcissistic rulers. The urban anthropological debate on the so-called disembedded capitals, which has been taking place since the early 1970s, is a good example of this approach. Disembedded capitals are newly built capital cities purposefully “disembedded” from existing patterns of political structure and settlement hierarchy within a territorial state in order to create a new power base (both political and military) for the benefit of a group of elites (Blanton 1976; Willey 1979). This culturally comparative notion is applied to ancient Near Eastern examples in both earlier (Joffe 1998a) and more recent (Yoffee 2005: 189) works. As a universalist model based on central place theory, it focuses only on imperial cities that are represented well in the historical record, such as Khorsabad and Nineveh, and offers causal explanations for historically specific political decisions to relocate and rebuild state capitals. However, in my opinion, the disembedded capitals thesis also literally disembeds the foundation of capital cities from the broader historical processes of landscape change, while divorcing urban economies from state ideologies and policy making. Additionally, the complexity of the production of urban space and its material, cultural, and technological aspects can find no place for itself in this debate. In contrast, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East contextualizes urban foundations within longer-term settlement trends, landscape processes, and broader environmental histories that are not easily grasped through short-term perspectives. Adopting a long-term perspective allows understanding the dynamics of settlement and human mobility in landscapes. On a detailed level, the monograph is also concerned with the micro-history and the material culture of newly created urban landscapes: their innovative architectural technologies, newly established cult festivals, eloquent configurations of public spaces, and urban textures. Furthermore, it considers this historical phenomenon as a laboratory to test theories of space, landscape, narrative, and representation.
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Introduction The idea of building a new city on fresh ground is often considered a generative force of civilized life for societies. The new city is assumed to feature a spatial realm that cultivates “a distinctive manner of life characterized as urban” (Wheatley 2001: 228). This manner of urbanity is brought out in the etymological relationship between city (Latin civitas) and civilization among the descendants of the Roman Empire, whereas such association is rendered in Arabic in a very similar way: mad¯ına and madaniyya.1 Speaking from a crosscultural point of view, then, urban life holds a symbolic image imbued with the ideals of economic prosperity, political stability, acculturation, and emerging social complexity. Ibn Khaldun, ˆ as in the quotation at the beginning of the chapter, saw the foundation of cities as indispensable for the establishment of civilized life and the exercise of power. In early Mesopotamian epic poetry, cities play a prominent role in social imagination and political narratives. In the epigraph to this book, in a few lines of the Sumerian literary composition “Ninurta’s Return to Nibru,” the city Nibru (Nippur) is personified as a monument of divine power acting in the political sphere (Black et al. 2006: 181–186). Situated monumentally in a horizontal, earthly human domain (“as if it were the horns of a wild bull”), the city and its temples constitute the civilized social space where people congregate for benevolent festivals and take refuge in times of disorder (Harmans¸ah, forthcoming). The foundation of a new city was meant to materialize those ideals of power, prosperity, and civilization in physical form in the eyes of the political elite. As an act initiated by a dominant class, a city foundation carried signatures of power. Yet, following their creation, cities assumed their own path of development, their own cultural biography, and transformed by means of the material practices of those who inhabited them. This transformation could often mean a departure from the initial architectural desires of their founders. The project of Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East is to address the making of cities as a negotiated, dialectic process. On the one hand are the representations of urban ideals, politics of urbanization, and monumental construction – in other words, the work of the political elite. On the other hand are the traces and residues of the material practices that served as a different form of spatial production. Understanding the negotiation of, and the dialectic between, these two processes in the long term is essential to the study of urban form. The problem of the urban ideals surfaces heavily in the textual and historical record, whereas the traces and residues in everyday spaces are largely accessible through the archaeological record (Brogiolo and Ward-Perkins 1999: xiv–xv). For these reasons, this book aims to establish a balance between macro- and micro-perspectives, the historical and the archaeological, even though sometimes they may seem to be at odds with one another. The reconciliation between
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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East the two, however, is possible through a critical reading of our sources and discussing openly the problem of historical representation. Widely found in a variety of geographies throughout the history of human settlement, the founding of cities was an important place- and space-generating social activity and settlement strategy. In the ancient world, from Phoenician and Greek colonies in the Mediterranean world to Akhenaten’s city at Tell el Amarna, from Alexander the Great’s new cities and military colonies to Augustan foundations in Rome’s provinces, the practice is well known in the ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern world. During periods of takeover of territories, the worlds of early Islam and medieval Europe became peppered with newly constructed towns (Kostof 1991, 1992; Wheatley 2001). City foundations were often set in previously desolate, uncultivated, or abandoned landscapes (“out of nothing”), and usually involved a monumental social undertaking. Large-scale building programs aimed at the planning and initiation of the rapid construction of an architectural urban core. Perhaps more significantly, these programs also involved the transformation of entire landscapes in the periphery of new cities, when the countryside was cultivated and structured to serve as an urban hinterland. Even though these city foundations appear in the historical record as short-term events at chosen locations, it is my contention that they were also always part of long-term settlement processes. Whereas the political decisions of the ruling elite find voice in the historical record that is preserved in monumental inscriptions and other written documents, the long-term processes of landscape change are harder to pin down. Archaeological research with its diachronic perspective on the deep history of landscapes is better suited to explore these processes and their possible connections to the city foundation events.
Cities, Landscape, and the Long Term In the Near Eastern historical record, urban foundations were usually accompanied by political rhetoric describing elite patronage and displayed in public monuments. This political rhetoric is a discourse that linked the military and economic accomplishments of imperial power to building operations and similar public benefactions in a causal relationship. Public benefactions involved in urban foundations were the erection of monuments and dedicatory statues, hosting public feasts, and establishing new festivals. This narrativizing discourse that connects military campaigns to building projects extends back to the early historical inscriptions from the Akkadian kingdom of the late third millennium bce (Studevent-Hickman and Morgan 2006). The narrative connection of this political discourse is emphasized, especially, if the new city was to become a governmental or ceremonial center, such as the city of Agade founded by the Akkadian king Sargon, according to literary and historical texts
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Introduction (Van de Mieroop 1999a). The foundation of the capital city Agade, the location of which remains unknown, marked Sargon’s establishment of his power in the southern Mesopotamian plains and was directly linked to the success of Akkadian military apparatus (Wall-Romana 1990: 208). In an Akkadian inscription of Yahdun-Lim, king of Mari (1810–1794 bce) – inscribed on bricks of the foundation of Sˇ amaˇs Temple at Mari – the king’s destruction of enemy fortresses and lands and his cutting of trees from “the mountains of cedar and boxwood” are juxtaposed with the king’s raising of monuments and building of temples (van Koppen 2006: 96–98). The commemorative monuments of the NeoAssyrian and Syro-Hittite cities that are discussed in this book represent perhaps one of the most complex examples of such narrativization in Near Eastern history. Founding royal cities therefore emerged as a political strategy of the imperial power and a stage for the spectacles of the state. The geographical displacement of the political urban center was a transformative moment in the history of any regional polity, signaling an innovative shift in settlement structure. This was accompanied by the building of new provincial centers and frontier fortresses that restructured the frontier zones and adjacent territories contested by territorial states and regional polities.2 New cities helped structure the organization of land for agricultural production with intensified cultivation through, for example, the introduction of irrigation systems. New ports of trade challenged the existing networks of interregional connectivity.3 Urban construction projects hosted innovative and symbolically charged architectural and artisanal technologies. Successful or unsuccessful in the long run, short-lived or long-term, the new settlements “assemble[d] a world” around them;4 they re-presented a new world order to their makers and subjects, substantially transformed their immediate human environment, and altered the hierarchy of relationships in the world into which they were incorporated. The textual accounts of city foundations in commemorative inscriptions and annalistic texts describe building projects as accomplishments of the ruling elite and fashion a narrative discourse referred to earlier as royal rhetoric. Pictorial narratives displayed on commemorative monuments in urban or rural contexts contribute to the communication of this rhetoric in all its permutations (Winter 1981a). The archaeological evidence for the construction of cities is not always commensurate with this visual and textual rhetoric of city foundations; therefore, it is important to illustrate both the overlap and the discrepancies between the processes of urban formation and their political representation. The second objective of this book is to compare just how the foundation of cities was represented in the textual, visual, and material records. The present approach pays attention to both physical and representational aspects of the practice of founding cities, both the practice on the ground and its political imagination. Consequently the book treats how cities were architecturally constructed, and
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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East it is equally occupied with the political and social processes of constructing meaning that are associated with those architectural practices. Urban foundations are attested during various periods of Near Eastern history from the first cities of southern Mesopotamia onward, but Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East focuses on the Upper Syro-Mesopotamian polities of the Early Iron Age (c. 1200–850 bce), for which there is a wealth of textual and archaeological evidence on the processes of urbanization. The approach is regional and compares the early Neo-Assyrian Empire in the Middle and Upper Tigris basins with the Syro-Hittite regional polities of northern Syria and southern and southeastern Turkey (Figure 1). This broad geographical region had a shared material culture that linked the contemporaneous Assyrian and Urartian territorial states, as well as the Luwian-, Aramaean-, and Phoenician-speaking Syro-Hittite regional polities. The Urartian state is not included in this book for the simple reason that it focuses on the Early Iron Age, whereas the main florescence of the Urartian state only takes place after the ninth century bce, even though Urartian architectural practices and urban foundations were very much part and parcel of this shared world. This world was founded on the long-term structures inherited from the Hittite and Assyrian empires of the Late Bronze Age, and developed throughout the Iron Age. The transition from the world of the Late Bronze Age empires to the fragmented polities of the Early Iron Age is a principal focus of Chapters 3 and 4. In those two chapters, the circulation of architectural knowledge and city-building practices are argued to participate in the processes of regional cultural change. Rather than presenting a comprehensive survey of Near Eastern cities built during the Iron Ages, this book inquires about the common and wide-ranging underpinnings of the practice of establishing cities through the analysis of case studies. What initially motivated this project was the striking similarity among the statements about urban construction and the cultivation of landscapes in Assyrian, Urartian, and Syro-Hittite commemorative monuments. Equally striking was that such parallels had never been thoroughly investigated in the scholarly literature. My synthesis of archaeological and textual evidence suggests that urban construction projects were not only a pervasive architectural practice in the Early Iron Age, but were also dominant in the royal rhetoric, perhaps only second to the report of military accomplishments. This synthesis fostered an understanding of how building cities, writing inscriptions, raising public monuments, and planting orchards all emerged contemporaneously. It is necessary in this synthesis to be sensitive to the nature of the evidence from macro to micro scales, and approaching city foundations required me to work in three different spatial and temporal scales: r long-term processes of landscape change and settlement history; r production of urban space through large-scale building projects; r the development of symbolically charged architectural technologies.
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Introduction These three scales of analysis make it possible to draw on a variety of evidence without necessarily assuming their correspondence. Long-term processes are revealed by survey archaeology and environmental research, whereas investigating urban histories makes use of published excavations, historical texts, and the monuments of the city. Especially those two bodies of evidence drawn from historical and archaeological records tend to balance each other between political representations and cultural practices, between ideologies and realities of the material world. Finally, fine-tuned fieldwork on architectural technologies such as quarrying and stone-carving techniques allows one to reconsider the cityscapes through their fabric of materials and technologies, surfaces and textures. This brings the discussion down to a very concrete aspect of city-building practices, its nuts and bolts within the building scale, while connecting the discussion to building craftsmen, technological knowledge, and the spaces of the everyday. The multi-scaled approach also demands theoretical and methodological grounding in multiple fields. Through the incorporation of contemporary critical approaches to landscape, urbanization, architectural space, and material culture, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East develops an understanding of the nature of space-producing activities in and around cities. Official texts from the Iron Age capital cities present a particularly urban-centered perspective with emphasis on the large-scale projects and their politically charged context. However, after considering long-term settlement history, city foundations emerge not completely confined to the construction of imperial capitals. They are connected to much broader settlement trends, and equally attested on the scale of villages, farmsteads, frontier fortresses, and regional centers. Additionally, my analysis of architectural technologies supports this view by demonstrating that the ubiquitous carved orthostat programs of the Iron Age cities should be understood in a diachronic perspective rather than purely as a short-term innovation, as has long been assumed. City foundations were festive events where performative spectacles of the state took place in the form of commemorations and feasting. These festive occasions acted as the stage for redefining the society’s relationship with the past. Construction projects involved the making of urban spaces that presented visual and textual narratives of the state through the erection of a constellation of commemorative monuments in the urban center. This was partly accomplished through the technique of raising stone orthostats, “obelisks,” and stelae with narrative relief programs in public places. The orthostat technique became a common practice among the Early Iron Age cities. As a technological style and architectural aesthetic in the urban landscape, the orthostats themselves acted as material manifestations of elite ideology. In conclusion, the three scales of analysis from the study of long-term landscape processes to the discussion of city foundations as short-term events and finally the documentation of specific
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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East innovative architectural technologies, each contribute to understanding the practice of founding cities as a historically distinct phenomenon during the transition from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age in upper SyroMesopotamia.
The Structure of the Book The historical problem of city foundations in this region lies at the heart of the present work. The next two chapters investigate landscape processes associated with the foundation of new urban settlements and regional landscape transformations in the territory of new cities during the Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age transition. The city foundation projects of Assyrian and Syro-Hittite rulers during this transition were much more ambitious than the physical construction of a city. The royal rhetoric expressed in monumental inscriptions and visual representations included a program of landscape cultivation with large-scale irrigation networks, plantations, and the settlement of populations. This rhetoric was put on public display through the construction of commemorative monuments that perpetually reimagined urban spaces and imperial landscapes. Commemorative monuments such as the Hittite, Late Hittite, and Assyrian rock reliefs and stelae demarcated contested territories and created an imagined map of imperial landscapes. My focus on broad landscape processes leads me to suggest that the construction of cities, erection of commemorative monuments, resettlement of the abandoned countryside, and cultivation of landscapes were components of what I call spatialized narratives of the state. The political landscapes became cultural artifacts that represented the utopian ideals of the governing elites on the one hand and attempted to construct an image of ecological prosperity in the collective imagination on the other. Both Chapters 2 and 3 rely extensively on archaeological evidence from upper Mesopotamian regional surveys. This evidence is then juxtaposed with the wellknown cases of urban foundations in specific regional contexts. In Chapter 2, the gradual southward shift of the geopolitical center of the Hittite Empire and its eventual collapse at the end of the Late Bronze Age are discussed. As a case study to illustrate the emergent urbanism of Syro-Hittite states following this collapse, a detailed analysis of the archaeological and epigraphic evidence for the formation of the regional state Malizi/Melid is presented. This kingdom established itself in the Malatya-Elbistan Plains in eastern Turkey during the first centuries of the Early Iron Age as one of the earliest political entities to emerge from the ashes of the Hittite Empire. Monuments raised by Malizean “country lords” in rural and urban contexts suggest a picture of a fluid landscape in transition, one that was configured through the construction of cities and other practices of place-making.
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Introduction Similar to the mobility in Hittite political landscapes in Chapter 2, Chapter 3 investigates the transformation of Assyrian landscapes during the late second and early first millennia bce, as part of the broader processes of settlement change in upper Mesopotamia. From the late fourteenth century bce onward, the geographical core and the political center of power was designated as the “Land of Aˇssˇur” in Assyrian royal inscriptions, and over the course of several centuries, this Land of Aˇssˇur gradually shifted northward, from the limited hinterland of the city of Aˇssˇur in the Middle Tigris region to the well-watered and resource-rich landscapes around the confluence of the Tigris and the Upper and Lower Zap rivers. Furthermore, landscapes of the Upper Tigris basin and the Jazira witnessed extensive settlement and cultivation as Assyrian provinces and frontiers. The chapter presents how the making of Assyrian landscapes involved founding of cities, large-scale building programs, construction of irrigation canals, planting of orchards, opening of new quarries, and sometimes settlement of populations. In Chapter 4, the discussion shifts to the urban-level building projects and explores these projects as a social performance and festive event. Large-scale building projects can be understood as events that disrupt the social life in ways analogous to public festivals in many ways. Building projects became public spectacles of the state and politicized stages where the royal rhetoric was materialized in the form of monuments and commemorative practices. These projects included architectural technologies and commemorative monuments such as the narˆu monuments (stelae and obelisks), orthostat programs, ancestor statues, and gate sculpture that were erected in public spaces and featured dynastic narratives of historical events in textual and pictorial form. Gradually defined by such monuments, urban landscapes were ritualized and ceremonialized through the institution of cult practices and annual festivals associated with the monuments. The implementation of these building projects reimagined social memories and identities. The royal rhetoric, therefore, created its own narratives of history and attempted to shape public spaces through specific architectural technologies employed in large-scale building programs. The focus in Chapter 4 is on two major building projects: the ninth-century bce Assyrian king Aˇssˇur-nasir-pal II’s foundation of his royal city at Kalhu and the extensive building program of the Suhis-Katuwas dynasty at Karkamiˇs in tenth and early ninth centuries bce. Under the roughly contemporaneous Early Iron Age kings of Kalhu and Karkamiˇs, their two cities witnessed comprehensive architectural renewal programs that transformed their public spaces through the construction of a constellation of commemorative monuments including roundtopped stelae, obelisks, inscribed statuary, rock reliefs, and orthostat relief programs. Likewise, in both cities, cultic ceremonies and state spectacles effectively reshaped these public areas and, through their performance, endowed
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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East their urban landscapes with a dramatic geography. The concept of spatial narratives is introduced here to discuss the process of the making of urban spaces through the narrativization of space, which was made possible by the gradual introduction of state monuments that visually and textually communicated endlessly adjusted and edited versions of the past to the imagination of the society. Chapter 5 explores the regionally shared architectural technologies employed in Early Iron Age cities. The major contribution of this section is to suggest that the large-scale building projects were hubs for the transfer of architectural knowledge and other technologies. One of the distinctive architectural technologies of the Early Iron Age forms the core of the discussion: the finely worked stone masonry and the raising of orthostats in Assyrian and Syro-Hittite public monuments. Based on archaeological and textual evidence, I propose that orthostats were first attested at northern Syrian sites such as Tell Mardikh and Tilmen H¨oyuk ¨ in the first half of the second millennium bce. As a regional architectural practice, orthostats were initially developed to consolidate mudbrick walls against the effects of weathering, especially erosion caused by rain, wind, and other forms of physical damage. Using this technique of wall-cladding, Near Eastern craftsmen continuously improved the architectonic qualities of building surfaces, while the orthostats acquired the status of a prestigious architectural technology and were explicitly discussed in Assyrian and Luwian monumental inscriptions. The transformation of orthostats into fields of pictorial representation erected in public spaces was an innovation of the craftsmen of Syro-Mesopotamia and Anatolia during the Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age transition. In Syro-Hittite and Assyrian cities, pictorial narrative programs of the ruling elite appeared contemporaneously and on a massive scale. These pictorial programs introduced highly animated wall surfaces across public spaces. The cult-centered programs of the Late Bronze Age temples and city gates were now accompanied by commemorative inscriptions and ideological narratives of the state that transformed the urban spaces into ceremonial places for the spectacles of the state and the construction of new dynastic identities. Architectural historian Kenneth Frampton’s (1990, 1995) idea of architectonic expression as a localized poetics of construction as well as the contemporary archaeological/art-historical discourse on material style, technological style, and facture influenced the theoretical framework of this chapter. Architectonics refers to the material aspect of buildings that derives from structural probity (uprightness) as well as the tactile qualities of building materials and construction techniques. More generally, this field attempts to bridge the gap between the cultural artifact and its making. Likewise, architecture may not be dissociated from the technologies of its making. In this way, the built environment is textured with a culturally meaningful architectonic expression,
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Introduction achieved through complex processes of craft production. The historical and social contexts of city foundations were precisely where such symbolically laden technologies were experimented with; the sites of the building projects became sites of material elaboration. The concluding chapter revisits all three scales of discussion and reflects on theoretical issues of space, cultural representation, and social practice in an attempt to elucidate how the new and rebuilt cities in the ancient Near East contribute to the interdisciplinary discussion of such issues. Likewise, the book as a whole contributes broadly the interpretative theories of architectural space from the perspective of premodern, preindustrial, and non-Western cultures. The study of architectural spaces of the ancient world is heavily conditioned by modernity and its concepts of space. In the modernist discourse of architectural criticism, architectural space is often objectified, presented as a visual or perceptual fetish, and becomes a commodity in the capitalist system. The nineteenth-century (predominantly German) discourse on architecture produced the concept of architectural space as an aesthetic and formal category on its own. Evaluated through the perceptual experience, space was studied in psychological terms and conceived as a realm of empathy (Einf¨uhlung) between architecture’s formal aspects and human perception. In this way, architectural space is gradually dissociated from its social relationships of production and treated as a thing-in-itself as if it could be analyzed as “a work of art” independent of the spatial practices and historical processes that bring it to existence. This abstract and formalist understanding of space is now embedded in our articulations of contemporary architectural history, and inevitably impacts the interpretation of architecture and urban space in the other fields of social sciences and humanities as well. The study of the architectural spaces of antiquity likewise suffers from anachronistic applications of these modern concepts of space to ancient built environments. In particular, the modernist assumption that architectural space is always designed professionally often surfaces in archaeological interpretations of space. These assumptions about architecture deny that building activity is a cultural process and that space is a social product. Similarly, it disregards the real social relations behind production of space. Lastly, it neglects practices that physically and cognitively transform space in the aftermath of the construction project. The foundation of cities as an intentional act of spatial production offers us an example of a curious historical event where various social agencies are at work, from political actors such as royal patrons of building projects, to building craftsmen and their overseers, all the way down to the ordinary citizens whose everyday practices transform the shape and meaning of spaces. Contrary to the accepted understanding of city foundations solely as the consequence of ideologically driven decisions of the political elite, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East suggests that this understanding derives from
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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East official historical sources that are dominated by the royal rhetoric of the ruling class. Secondly, this understanding assumes modernist understanding of spatial production. When the various archaeological, environmental, pictorial, and textual evidence is weighed as a whole, the social complexity of urban foundations necessarily emerges. Likewise, the seemingly short-term political event of city founding appears as a product of long-term settlement processes, landscape structures, and sustained cultural practices. Cities can get built in a matter of a few years, but they are only possible through the employment of accumulated knowledge of regional building traditions. Buildings can rise to the sky seemingly overnight, but they are only made meaningful through the human engagements with their spaces and surfaces. The ruling elite might stand behind major historic decisions, but they themselves owe their positions to much longer-term social processes and historical contingencies. These are the stories I tell in this book.
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two
LANDSCAPES OF CHANGE cities, politics, and memory
. . . [T]he study of landscape is much more than an academic exercise – it is about the complexity of people’s lives, historical contingency, contestation, motion and change. . . . If . . . we broaden the idea of landscape and understand it to be the way in which people – all people – understand and engage with the material world around them, and if we recognize that people’s being-in-the-world is always historically and spatially contingent, it becomes clear that landscapes are always in process, potentially conflicted, untidy and uneasy. Barbara Bender 2001: 2–3 Like other forms of material culture, landscape has the potential to broaden the scope of historical enquiry beyond those persons who had the skill and power to leave a written record. Although some landscapes may reveal a singular vision, of a designer or patron, for example, most are touched in some way by a wide variety of human endeavor, encompassing the difference as well as the commonality of a particular society over time. Marina Moskowitz 2009: 71
Introduction: Cities and Moving Landscapes “Abandoned cities, which during the time of my fathers had turned into ruined hills, I took in hand for renovation [and] settled therein many people,” announces Aˇssˇur-nasir-apli II, the ninth-century bce Assyrian king. He contin¯ ues, “ancient palaces throughout my land I built anew. I decorated them in a splendid fashion [and] stored grain and straw in them.”1 Upper Mesopotamian and Anatolian states of the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages took special interest in engaging with their environment and transforming their landscapes through large-scale building operations – from the foundation of new cities and the
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Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East plantation of orchards, to the construction of irrigation systems and the carving of rock reliefs. Aˇssˇur-nasir-apli’s statement at the beginning of this paragraph ¯ does not refer to one particular building project but articulates a comprehensive landscape policy intended to transform the built environment he had inherited. His rhetoric evokes an ancestral topography of monuments that he plans to restore. Through his landscape projects and rhetoric of kingship, the “king was actively engaged in the construction of social memory” as Ruth Van Dyke and Sue Alcock (2003:1) put it when discussing memory practices of Near Eastern rulers. In the historical record, the representation of upper Mesopotamian landscapes is dominated by spectacular accounts of urbanization and the fluorescence of urban life, evident in the legendary stories of cities like Assyrian N¯ınuwa, Urartian Tuˇspa, and the Syro-Hittite Karkamiˇs. Monumental inscriptions from these states refer repeatedly to the cultivation of uncivilized landscapes through the foundation of cities and present an urban-centered discourse of state ideology. Prosperity of the state in those records is strikingly tied to the necessity of such “civilizing” processes: the building, cultivation, and irrigation of newly colonized territories. Near Eastern archaeology’s century and a half investment of labor in excavating large settlements for their rich assemblages of prestige artifacts, archives of texts, and monumental architecture has only reinforced this dominant image of the city. Just as Barbara Bender and Marina Moskowitz state in this chapter’s opening epigraphs, however, archaeological landscapes have different stories to tell, and those stories extend well beyond the grand projects of construction and political interventions in the environment. Landscapes are “inherently dynamic and historically sensitive” from their hold on material memories, the subtle residues of long-term human practices, events, and political conflicts, as well as layers of cultural imagination and story-telling (Alcock 1993:7; see also Bender 2006). If landscapes are fluid and intractable, richly textured and layered, as most thinkers of landscape and place would argue today, limiting the agency to transform landscapes solely to political actors needs to be questioned. This, by no means, denies the place and efficacy of the imperial building projects in the landscape, but my objective is to emphasize the necessity of putting these projects in the context of longer-term settlement trends and environmental change. Michael Jackson reminds us, citing Karl Marx, “men make their history, but they do not make it just as they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under the circumstances directly encountered, given and transmitted from the past” (Marx 1934:10; cited in Jackson 2007:23). More radically, history “is an endless new chain of happenings whose eventual outcome the actor is utterly incapable of knowing or controlling beforehand” (Arendt 1958:59–60; cited in Jackson 2007:23).
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Landscapes of Change
2
Map of main archaeological survey projects in Upper Mesopotamia. (Base map by Peri Johnson, using ESRI Topographic Data [Creative Commons]: World Shaded Relief )
Equipped with the field methods of intensive and extensive survey, contemporary approaches to landscape archaeology have flourished in the last several decades and provided us with the archaeological tools for understanding the history of Near Eastern landscapes (Cherry 2003; Alcock and Cherry 2004; Wilkinson 2003; Wilkinson, Ur and Casana 2004). This chapter discusses urban foundations of the transition from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age in the context of environmental and settlement histories derived from this landscape archaeology. It brings together the environmental, archaeological, art historical, and textual evidence to understand new cities as a component of long-term processes of landscape transformation. Understanding a historical practice, such as city foundations, demands that we critically consider both material practices and their representation in textual records and visual culture. In the next section, I discuss the political representations of the practice of founding cities and analyze how architectural projects are incorporated into the official discourse of the state. Following this broader evaluation of textual accounts, recent developments in landscape archaeology and theory are presented to set the grounds for a critical analysis of upper Mesopotamian landscapes of settlement. The evidence from recent archaeological survey work in upper Mesopotamia offers us regionally specific processes of settlement change from the urbanized and trade-oriented world of the Late Bronze Age to the dispersed and rural country life in the Early Iron Age (Table 1 and Figure 2).
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18 Table 1. Main archaeological regional survey projects in Upper Mesopotamia: the Late Bronze Age-Iron Age transition.
Project and area (survey universe)
Publication
Methodology
Late Bronze – Early Iron transition
Tigris-Euphrates Archaeological Reconnaissance Project, SE Turkey 1988–1991 Upper Tigris region valley basins, SE Turkey. Subregions: 1. Batman Su/Tigris basin from Batman to Bismil. 2. Cizre-Silopi plain 3.Tigris basin N of Cizre 4. Bohtan Su area 5. Garzan Su basin.
Algaze 1989. Algaze et al. 1991. Rosenberg and Togul 1991. Parker 2001b.
Varying but usually non-intensive, vehicular, but interested in smaller, usually flat, single-period sites as much as multi-period tells. Spotty walking surveys around major sites.
In Batman Su, MB is largely absent, LB difficult to recognize: some attestation of Nuzi ware, Habur ware, but also some distinctive Middle Assyrian. IA sites are widely recognized, especially around Ziyaret Tepe. Garzan Su basin also has several agriculturally oriented IA sites on river terraces and hilltops, a total of 15 IA sites were identified, 12 of which were